English to Punjabi Dictionary vocabulary

vocabulary

ਸ਼ਬਦਾਵਲੀ
definition
noun
Just as the vocabulary of a language changes from age to age, so the vocabularies of different languages are distinct in their systems, uses, and references.
the body of words used in a particular language.
example
These, and similar phrases, form the 'vocabulary' of dictatorship.
This was the day that the word contemplative entered my 'vocabulary' , giving shape to the way I wanted to live my life.
the 'vocabulary' of law
he had a wide 'vocabulary'
Stephen Lewis used his unmatched 'vocabulary' and stirring oratorical style to take globalization to task.
So, I faced the choice of either eliminating grand pliés from my 'vocabulary' of movement, or end up with an early exit from dance.
the term became part of business 'vocabulary'
One can argue that, given equal exposure to words, the size of an individual's 'vocabulary' reflects the individual's cognitive skills.
But Martins just doesn't have the 'vocabulary' or perhaps the artistic reach to evoke such imagery as dramatically as Adams does.
Each beat has its own language, a 'vocabulary' of terms, a collection of jargon, a way of describing things that you must master but not allow to be limiting.
Moreover, even with the borrowings from flamenco, the movement 'vocabulary' was thin, with very little formal choreography.
She kept on trying to talk to me in English even if her 'vocabulary' was pretty limited.
As an added bonus, I realised, new falconers get to learn a 'vocabulary' of Medieval English for free.
the 'vocabulary' of law
You see a lot of the contemporary people using the ballet vocabulary and the ballet people using the contemporary 'vocabulary' .
I couldn't write good lyrics in English, because my 'vocabulary' is too poor.
When you learn to develop your 'vocabulary' then you won't have to use bad language as often.
Of all writers, he discovers, Shakespeare has the widest 'vocabulary' relating to the varieties of weeds found in rural Warwickshire.
‘Training sessions’ in which the pseudo-science 'vocabulary' can be learned, have become part of the activists' agenda.
His arguments, phrased in the 'vocabulary' of the modern scientist and based upon the latest of neurological studies, are those of nineteenth century liberalism.
In an excerpt from Daughters of the Ocean, she demonstrated the interweaving of martial arts movements like tai chi into her dance 'vocabulary' .
the Sanskrit 'vocabulary'
Four years of living in Manchester had taken their toll on his 'vocabulary' and, very occasionally, his accent.
he had a wide 'vocabulary'
But I venture that not even cricket has a 'vocabulary' as wide and arcane as that of sailing.
For example, anyone who has looked at a flora or fauna knows that the 'vocabulary' can be specialized and complex.
On some occasions, the 'vocabulary' that she employs in her response to Derrida is recriminatory.
Soon the young language was not only standing on its own two grammatical feet, it also possessed the largest 'vocabulary' of any language on the planet.
There isn't a word in the English 'vocabulary' to describe her.
These people absorbed into their language some of the 'vocabulary' of the native populations of the area, but the identity and origin of these earlier peoples is now unknown.
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